Deconstructive approaches to cultural and literary tropes
the origin of the construction was introduced by a french philosopher _ in the late 1960's
Jacques Derrida
for the deconstruction
_ text or not self contained with a single meaning instead they are built on unstable structures of language.
_the construction reveals how tax rely on opposites like male or female good or evil present versus absence that are not stable but constantly shifting.
_meaning is never fully present it is always deferred shaped by differences in language and context
_readers and cover contradictions and tensions in text rather than seeking a single authoritative interpretation.
core idea
binary oppositions
stability of meaning
reader's role
Problem: Equates beauty with virtue, ugliness with evil (Cinderella).
Fix: Separate morality from appearance; reframe plain or "ugly" characters with agency.
Physiognomic Deconstruction: Beauty as Goodness Myth
Problem: Good women portrayed as passive or unconscious (Snow White, Sleeping Beauty).
Fix: Emphasize autonomy; awaken through dialogue, puzzles, or self-determination.
Agency Deconstruction: Passivity as Virtue
Problem: Older women reduced to jealous rivals (Snow White, Cinderella).
Fix: Humanize stepmothers as survivors of patriarchal socio-economic pressures.
Gender/Maternal Deconstruction: The Evil Stepmother Trope
Problem: Happiness tied to nobility or superior birth (Ugly Duckling, Cinderella).
Fix: Reframe success through independence, networking, or community-building.
Class Deconstruction: Royal Fix and Class Essentialism
Problem: Cleverness coded as deceitful, nobility as virtuous (Aesop's Fables).
Fix: Recast tricksters as survivors using intelligence in unequal systems.
Animal Archetype Deconstruction: Trickster vs. Noble Hero
Problem: Older women portrayed as saints or monsters (Hansel and Gretel, Cinderella).
Fix: Provide nuanced backstories; show independence and boundaries.
Ageism Deconstruction: Witch vs. Fairy Godmother
Problem: Princes reduced to stoic, one-dimensional prizes (Snow White).
Fix: Give princes vulnerability, hobbies, and non-combative interests.
Masculinity Deconstruction: Prince Charming and Toxic Masculinity
Problem: Forests coded as danger, villages as safety (Little Red Riding Hood).
Fix: Reframe nature as sanctuary; wolf as guardian of ecosystem.
Ecocritical Deconstruction: Wild VS. Civilized Landscapes
Problem: Difference equated with monstrosity (Beauty and the Beast).
Fix: Validate diversity; celebrate cultural exchange instead of assimilation,
Xenophobia Deconstruction: The Foreigner as Beast
Problem: Disability or disfigurement coded as evil (Captain Hook, Darth Vader).
Fix: Separate morality from physical ability; normalize visible differences in protagonists.
Ableism Deconstruction: The Disabled Villain Trope
Problem: Endings celebrate conquest and theft as heroic (Jack and the Beanstalk).
Fix: Reframe from the Giant's perspective; expose Jack as intruder and thief
Post-Colonial Deconstruction: The "Happy Ending" as Colonial Expansion